Browsing Posts tagged Alaska

In the last five years, there have been more than 30 reality TV shows set in Alaska. Many of these spotlight—intentionally or accidentally—the storied, exotic wildlife in the state and the way humans interact with it. There are grizzly bears, black bears, moose, ptarmigan, lynxes, wolves, whales, and a host of other critters.

None of these shows have focused on another animal that’s just as ubiquitous in Alaska as it is the rest of the country: the feral cat. The Humane Society of the United States estimates that there may be as many as 50 million feral cats in the country. A feral cat is an undomesticated outdoor cat or a stray or abandoned cat that has reverted to a wild state. Truly feral cats will never be amenable to living with humans. Feral cats can be born or made: animals reproduce indiscriminately if left unchecked. But often the problem starts with people failing to spay and neuter their pets and allowing them to roam or abandoning them. Feral cats form groups called colonies, and each colony adopts a territory. It’s not surprising that they’re found even in Alaska’s rugged clime.

What is surprising is that the state that has both an unofficial cat mayor and a tradition of working to live in harmony with its wildlife—a necessity given the overlap of humans into animals’ habitats—also has a feral cat problem and a reluctance to embrace the solution. continue reading…

Wolves do it, bulls do it, even educated gulls do it…. At the risk of indelicacy at the very start of this week’s edition, the “it” in question is, well, the elimination of solid waste from the body. In the case of wolves, dogs, and even cows, it would seem that this elimination is effected with an eye toward the cardinal points of the compass.

To be a touch more direct, when dogs poop, scientists hypothesize, they do so on a north–south alignment. Now, given that the words “science” and “scatology” share a deep, deep common root in the speech of the proto-Indo-European peoples, it stands to reason that researchers should want to do more than hypothesize about such matters. But more, zoologists at Germany’s University of Duisburg-Essen are seeking to bring citizen science to bear on the question by gathering data from volunteer observers everywhere. If you’d like to help point them in the right direction, please sign up. continue reading…

An Interview with Amy Sherrow, Aquarist I at the Alaska SeaLife Center

Seward, Alaska: the city where bald eagles are regular waterfront visitors, a black bear ran across the road in front of my car, and I got to hand-feed a seven-armed giant Pacific octopus named Gus, under the guidance of Amy Sherrow, an Aquarist I at the Alaska SeaLife Center, a private nonprofit corporation and Alaska’s only public aquarium and ocean wildlife rescue center.

Sherrow with Thumb, a giant Pacific octopus–courtesy of the Alaska SeaLife Center/Amy Sherrow

When Sherrow isn’t informing and delighting visitors by sharing Gus’s antics and intelligence—he can open jars and plastic Easter eggs!—she’s part of the team caring for a host of octopus paralarvae, of which there were seven at the Alaska SeaLife Center as of October 24, 2013. It’s been 30 years since an octopus was hatched in captivity and successfully raised to adulthood (at the Seattle Aquarium).

Sherrow discusses with us her work at the Center and how this team hopes to repeat that success with this new batch of tiny octopuses.

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Britannica: Can you describe a typical day at your job? What’s the best part?

Sherrow: First thing in the morning I go around and check all of my tanks and make sure the water is flowing, and everybody is happy. We record the temperatures of each tank every morning and afternoon. We actually keep a log book of the temperatures. I backwash the sand filters twice a week to help keep the filters running smoothly. I feed something every day, but not every fish gets fed every day. In the wild, certain species eat only when the opportunity presents itself, which might mean they go a few days without eating anything, so we try to mimic this without putting too much stress on the animals by feeding most of our animals every other day. We thaw food out overnight in the fridge and cut it into appropriately sized pieces for the size of the fish’s mouth. continue reading…

Each week the National Anti-Vivisection Society (NAVS) sends out an e-mail alert called “Take Action Thursday,” which tells subscribers about current actions they can take to help animals. NAVS is a national, not-for-profit educational organization incorporated in the State of Illinois. NAVS promotes greater compassion, respect, and justice for animals through educational programs based on respected ethical and scientific theory and supported by extensive documentation of the cruelty and waste of vivisection. You can register to receive these action alerts and more at the NAVS Web site.

This week’s Take Action Thursday deals with recent legislation and other initiatives concerning wolves in various states across the country.continue reading…

For “sled dogs,” animal cruelty has become a corporate-sponsored industry. Beginning on March 2, 2013 Alaska will hold the annual “Iditarod”—in which teams of dogs are forced to pull a sled over 1,100 miles across the Alaska wilderness, often running at a grueling pace of over 100 miles per day for ten straight days. The race has become a huge money maker for corporate sponsors.

According to the Sled Dog Action Coalition, since the race began in 1973, over 130 dogs have died during the event. Dogs suffer heart attacks, pneumonia, muscle deterioration, dehydration, diarrhea, and spine injuries. They are impaled on sleds, drowned, or accidentally strangled. During the off-season the dogs are crowded into small kennels with no state management or oversight. Many are tethered on short chains at all times, unable to play, forced to sit, stand, and lie in the same small area in which they eat and defecate—conditions that cause untold emotional and physical stress. When these “money-makers” are no longer profitable, they are destroyed, as are the puppies who aren’t qualified to race. The Sled Dog Action Coalition notes that the dogs often aren’t even humanely euthanized, but merely shot in the head. continue reading…

"Service Animal" Scammers (New Yorker): An increasing number of your neighbors have been keeping company with their pets in human-only establishments simply by claiming that the creatures are their licensed companion animals and are necessary to their mental well-being.

Why London’s pig café pop-up is a terrible idea for pigs: Teacup pigs are adorable. Unfortunately, they’re also a complete fabrication. But that isn’t stopping a local London specialty breeder and Yelp from putting on an adoption event to educate the public on “proper” micro pig care.